BOARDING the bus near Wutai Mountain’s Guanyin Cave — the most southerly point I visited on the main road through Taihuai — I rode all the way to Bishan Temple, the northernmost temple on my itinerary.

The “Bi” character in “Bishan” can be translated as “jade” or “green,” making the name perhaps “Jade Mountain” or “Green Mountain” Temple. But it may be a play on an older name, “Beishan” (North Mountain), recognizing the temple’s location at the northern end of the valley where Taihuai is located.

The first temple built on the site dates to the late fifth century, in the Northern Wei Dynasty. But its current layout comes from the era of Qing Emperor Kangxi, who sponsored its reconstruction.

The layout is fairly standard, but with some nice variations. A stunning pailou (a kind of gate) stands at the front of the central axis. After the usual Heavenly Kings’ Hall, the main hall is dedicated to Vairocana, the Great Sun Buddha, and my favorite.

The third hall contains an ordination platform where monks are created. Rare enough in China, this is the only ordination hall on Wutai Mountain. The huge platform is hidden under modern statuary, and a thousand small Buddhas line the rafters. Finally, at the top of the compound is a sutra repository. Private halls for sleeping and meditation lie outside the compound.

Of interest to Shenzheners is that Master Ben Huan, the late abbot of Hongfa Temple who died here in 2012 at age 106, was abbot at Bishan from 1939 and throughout the Second World War.